Tag Archives: reporting

Tip 9 – Generating a report from your log file

When running a performance test with Jmeter it is generally adviced to run the test in non-gui mode and to log your responses to a file. My typical command for a performance test looks something like this:

-n => Non-GUI
-t => the testscenario JMX file to run as a test
-j => where to write the Jmeter logfile
-l => where to write the sample results to. This typically gets a JTL-extension

Once you have run your test successfully the real work of a performance tester starts, analyzing the outcomes and communicating the results and of course providing advice what to do with these results.

For the result-graphs you can of course use the Jmeter Listeners. You can also use Excel. But neither are a very easy nor a friendly way to do it.

Thankfully JMeter has a very nice, although not very elegant solution to this. I consider this not very elegant since you can only trigger it via commandline. The results however are quite elegant and pretty to view.

Run the following command to get your pretty report once your test is finished:

This generates a very nice HTML/js based reporting dashboard. I will refrain from going into details about how nice the dashboard has become over the years, you can read all that is in the dashboards on the Apache Jmeter site.

The landing page may look something like this:

The graphs on the dashboard are all ineractive, you can zoom in on specific details, filter out specifi requests etc. I really like what has become of these reports.

The negative side of that way of generating a report is that you still have to do it once you are done running your performance tests.

That too can be solved! When running tests from a commandline I generally use a command close to this:

flags and arguments. The little extra sauce I give is that I generally open a second console where I tail the JMeter log and potentially the JTL log. So in my main window, where I started the testrun, I prefer to have my commandline available to do useful things such as shutdown JMeter if so required. Hence I send the console output to

/dev/null

and send any possible error stream directly to the output stream (which again is sent into the void that is /dev/null

Last but not least I background the process with the & in order for me to have my console back and available.